Excerpt from The Oceanic Languages: Their Grammatical Structure, Vocabulary, and OriginFor a short Efatese grammar the reader is referred to the work entitled Three New Hebrides Languages: Efate, Eromanga, Santo 5 for short grammars of other New Hebrides languages, to that entitled South Sea Studies and for some general outline of Oceanic grammar, to that entitled Oceania: Linguistic and Anthro pological. Any remark on a particular point in the present work which differs from any similar remark that I had made in the works just named is to be regarded as correcting it. Even in the present work, as, e.g., in treating of the formative particles, many of the main elements of Oceanic grammar are dealt with in a work treating of the whole material of a language of a family so extremely analytic as the Oceanic, it could not well be otherwise. While fully convinced of the importance of grammar in comparative philology, I have for many years been equally convinced that, to establish the Asiatic origin of the. Oceanic languages, the whole material of one Oceanic language must be dealt with, as in the present work.About the PublisherForgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books.
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